Batra Jaskirat Singh, Chi Ting-Yen, Huang Mo-Fan, Zhu Dandan, Chen Zheyuan, Lee Dung-Fang, Kameoka Jun
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77840, USA.
Department of Integrative Biology and Pharmacology, McGovern Medical School, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Biosensors (Basel). 2023 Aug 31;13(9):861. doi: 10.3390/bios13090861.
The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has increased pressure to develop low-cost, compact, user-friendly, and ubiquitous virus sensors for monitoring infection outbreaks in communities and preventing economic damage resulting from city lockdowns. As proof of concept, we developed a wearable paper-based virus sensor based on a molecular imprinting technique, using a conductive polyaniline (PANI) polymer to detect the lentivirus as a test sample. This sensor detected the lentivirus with a 4181 TU/mL detection limit in liquid and 0.33% to 2.90% detection efficiency in aerosols at distances ranging from 30 cm to 60 cm. For fabrication, a mixture of a PANI monomer solution and virus were polymerized together to form a conductive PANI sensing element on a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) paper substrate. The sensing element exhibited formation of virus recognition sites after the removal of the virus via ultrasound sonication. A dry measurement technique was established that showed aerosol virus detection by the molecularly imprinted sensors within 1.5 h of virus spraying. This was based on the mechanism via which dispensing virus droplets on the PANI sensing element induced hybridization of the virus and molecularly imprinted virus recognition templates in PANI, influencing the conductivity of the PANI film upon drying. Interestingly, the paper-based virus sensor was easily integrated with a wearable face mask for the detection of viruses in aerosols. Since the paper sensor with molecular imprinting of virus recognition sites showed excellent stability in dry conditions for long periods of time, unlike biological reagents, this wearable biosensor will offer an alternative approach to monitoring virus infections in communities.
冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行增加了开发低成本、紧凑、用户友好且无处不在的病毒传感器的压力,以监测社区中的感染爆发并防止因城市封锁造成的经济损失。作为概念验证,我们基于分子印迹技术开发了一种可穿戴纸质病毒传感器,使用导电聚苯胺(PANI)聚合物检测慢病毒作为测试样本。该传感器在液体中检测慢病毒的检测限为4181 TU/mL,在30厘米至60厘米的距离处,对气溶胶中的检测效率为0.33%至2.90%。在制造时,将聚苯胺单体溶液和病毒的混合物聚合在一起,在聚对苯二甲酸乙二醇酯(PET)纸基材上形成导电聚苯胺传感元件。通过超声处理去除病毒后,传感元件显示出病毒识别位点的形成。建立了一种干式测量技术,该技术表明分子印迹传感器在病毒喷雾后1.5小时内可检测气溶胶病毒。这是基于将病毒液滴滴加到聚苯胺传感元件上会诱导病毒与聚苯胺中的分子印迹病毒识别模板杂交,在干燥时影响聚苯胺膜的导电性的机制。有趣的是,纸质病毒传感器很容易与可穿戴口罩集成,用于检测气溶胶中的病毒。由于具有病毒识别位点分子印迹的纸质传感器在干燥条件下长时间显示出优异的稳定性,与生物试剂不同,这种可穿戴生物传感器将为监测社区中的病毒感染提供一种替代方法。